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Ch. 6: American Revolutions, 1775–1783 Patriots need to transform earlier resistance into coalition for independence Need: To generate enough popular support to endure long conflict Foreign allies, esp. France A military strategy to defeat British I. Toward War Battles of Lexington and Concord Assuming patriots would be easily defeated, British try to seize military supplies in Concord, MA (April 1775) / Arrest J. Hancock & S. Adams After dispersing Lexington’s militia, British face significant armed opposition in Concord Forced to retreat to Boston The Siege of Boston Open warfare starts Patriots encircle Boston I. Toward War (cont'd.) First Year of War British strategy: 1) create large professional army to defeat patriots quickly 2) capture major cities and win key battles 3) once defeated, colonies would be loyal British not realize this a different war First modern war of national liberation I. Toward War (cont'd.) Second Continental Congress evolved into intercolonial war government Olive Branch Petition rejected Peace = repeal the Intolerable Act George Washington 2nd Cont. Congress selects Washington as commander (1775) integrity military experience devotion to representative government and revolution Background? p150 II. Forging an Independent Republic Common Sense Paine’s Common Sense (1776) generate support for overt independence advocate republic without king or nobility stress English exploitation widely distributed/discussed because reflect oral culture of majority (everyday language, Bible) p153 II. Forging an Independent Republic (cont’d.) Jefferson & the Declaration of Independence Jefferson = main author of Declaration See George III as tyrant out to destroy representative government Establish basic political ideals: all men created equal with key rights government by consent right of revolution Colonies to States Congress encourage states to draft constitutions = move to formal separation II. Forging an Independent Republic (cont’d.) Colonies to States (cont’d.) Develop documents: specifying structure, use special conventions, electorate ratification Limiting State Governments Fear of tyranny shape new state structures Restrict governors; strengthen legislatures Lower property qualification for voting Enumerate rights with independent judiciary II. Forging an Independent Republic (cont’d.) Articles of Confederation A unicameral legislature Each state has 1 vote regardless of population 9/13 majority required to pass legislation 13/13 to amend Funding a Revolution Congress borrows at home and abroad Decline of the “Continental” Figure 6-1 p156 III. Choosing Sides Patriots 2/5 of Euro-Americans active revolutionaries: Farmers, dominant Protestant sects, Chesapeak gentry and merchants Loyalists Loyalists = 20% of European Americans Dislike British policy since mid-1760s, but reject separation Fear violence, prefer constitutional reform p157 III. Choosing Sides (cont'd.) Neutrals 40% neutral; either opportunistic or want to be left alone, esp. on frontier Revolutionaries punish loyalists and neutrals Native Americans Ignoring 1763 Proclamation, frontier settlers very anti-Native American Most remain neutral, some become hesitant British allies; a few tribes support patriots III. Choosing Sides (cont'd.) African Americans For slaves, key issue = freedom; most decide British offer best chance of release More than 10,000 runaways join British IV. The Struggle in the North British abandon Boston (1776) New York and New Jersey defeat Washington in Manhattan Washington retreat through NJ British brutalities alienate many Washington’s attacks at Trenton and Princeton rally patriot support Campaign of 1777 British generals (Howe, Burgoyne) not coordinate 1777 campaigns Move slowly = give rebels time to prepare Map 6-1 p162 IV. The Struggle in the North (cont'd.) Campaign of 1777 (cont’d.) Howe focus on Philadelphia, but victory there not big help to British Iroquios Confederacy Splinters Iroquois divide (1777); some ally with British Result = defeat and displacement IV. The Struggle in the North (cont'd.) Burgoyne’s Surrender Burgoyne defeated at Saratoga (NY) After Saratoga, France shift from covert to open support for revolution Franco-American Alliance of 1778 In 2 treaties (1778), France recognize and ally with new nation Now a global war: British face expanded conflict French supplies and military support crucial V. Battlefield and Home Front Militia Units Early shift from militia to Continental Army Continental Army Most enlistees = young, single, landless Sign up for bonuses and land Middle states recruit many immigrants 5,000 blacks (slave and free) join Women provide key support V. Battlefield and Home Front(cont'd.) Hardship and Disease Army life difficult: low wages poor clothing/food disease (smallpox) Desertion a problem Inoculations and foreign-born recruits help Those captured by British suffer terribly VI. The War Moves South South Carolina and the Caribbean Success in Caribbean and GA (1778-79) Take Charleston (1780) On surface British dominate SC But not control interior French threaten naval supply links, Caribbean Tens of 1,000s slaves escape Disrupt southern economy VI. The War Moves South (cont'd.) General Green and the Southern Campaign conciliate loyalists and neutrals reestablish civilian authority keep most Indians neutral (key for backcountry militias) Tide turns post-1780 as British lose south Surrender at Yorktown Washington trapped Cornwallis at Yorktown with help of French fleet (1781); resign = precedent of civilian control of military Map 6-2 p169 VII. Uncertain Victories Treaty of Paris American diplomats deftly negotiate Paris Treaty Generous boundaries for new USA Persistence key to victory Colonists (esp. in military) form new U.S. identity Independence costly in lives and material: -25,000 dead -economy shattered / lots of debt